Page:Malay Sketches.pdf/188

From Wikisource
Jump to navigation Jump to search
This page has been proofread, but needs to be validated.

MALAY SKETCHES

under the house, and the King looked upon the machine and said it was good and cheap and would cat nothing.
These are the words of the Priest: "The four days went by and the men came to be paid, and I told my master, but he seemed to be busy with other things, and I sent them away to come again the next day. In this way the time passed till the day for our departure, and I knew the men who owned the box and the carriage were angry, but I saw my master wanted the things. When at last the trouble came, and the King said it was not his business but mine, I told the men they could take the box and the carriage back because they did not please the King, but they would not, and I was afraid lest shame should come on my master, and I went out and borrowed the money and paid it. Could I, who am a priest, play with a box that sings not of God nor the Prophet ? Can I, who am a poor man, who only live ta pray and ta preach, ta exhort the living and to bury the dead, can I ride on the stomachless horse with three wheels, I whose duty is in the mosque and by the grave? My master the King knows that in this thing as in others I have but obeyed the voice of my master."

So Church and State quarrelled, and the priest

170